Alex Ferguson celebrated 25 years as Manchester United's manager as his team beat Sunderland 1-0 at Old Trafford on Sunday morning.

But the Red Devils still remain five points behind Manchester City at the top of the Premier League after City won 3-2 at Queens Park Rangers.

United's win, its fourth without conceding a goal since its 6-1 home loss to City last month, was overshadowed by Ferguson's silver anniversary occasion and was far from glittering, with the winner coming from former United defender Wes Brown, who put through his own net just before half-time.

But City stayed clear at the top when it won a five-goal thriller at Loftus Road, where Yaya Toure headed home the winner 16 minutes from time.

With 11 matches played City have 31 points, followed by United on 26, unbeaten Newcastle United on 25 and Chelsea on 22.

It was an emotional day at Old Trafford but the game will not live as long in the memory as the other events on the day, with United's chief executive, David Gill, announcing the north stand had been renamed the "Sir Alex Ferguson Stand" and that a statue of the 69-year-old Scot was being commissioned to mark his achievements for the club since he took over on November 6, 1986.

Ferguson has brought 37 trophies to Old Trafford and, although his are not leading the title race now, it still remains deep in the hunt for a 13th championship since 1993.

Ferguson admitted afterwards: "I thought we were anxious but in the second half we improved, although the last 15 minutes was torture.

"I don't know whether it was down to the way Sunderland played, or the occasion; these emotional occasions, which it was for me today, sometimes get through to them."

Another win

City made it 10 wins from 11 matches at QPR, where the home side went ahead with a Jay Bothroyd header after 28 minutes. Edin Dzeko equalised with a well-taken individual goal 15 minutes later, before David Silva gave City the lead with another excellent solo strike early in the second half.

Heidar Helguson equalised for the home side after 69 minutes, but poor defending by the west London side allowed Toure to power in the winning header five minutes later.

Newcastle maintained its unbeaten league start to the season with a 2-1 win over Everton, with an own goal by Johnny Heitinga and a superbly struck dipping shot from Ryan Taylor putting it in control before Jack Rodwell pulled one back with a header just before half-time.

Chelsea, who won 1-0 at lowly Blackburn Rovers with a Frank Lampard header, remained fourth place on 22 points.

Despite losing, Blackburn, who has now lost five of its six home league games, played quite well but could find no way past Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Cech, who ended the match with a broken nose after colliding with Rovers' Yakubu Aiyegbeni and Ashley Cole, which caused a seven-minute holdup.

Chelsea manager Andre Villas-Boas, pleased his side won after two successive defeats, added: "Petr broke his nose. He's very injury-prone in football accidents, all sorts of things have happened to him but he hung on bravely today."

Arsenal victory

Arsenal continued its revival by beating West Bromwich Albion 3-0 for its fifth straight league win at the Emirates with Robin Van Persie among the scorers, taking his tally to eight goals in his last four league games and 29 in his last 28.

Defender Thomas Vermaelen scored his first goal in two years and Mikel Arteta added the other as Arsenal won for the sixth time in seven matches in all competitions.

Aston Villa beat Norwich City 3-2 in a superb match at Villa Park with Darren Bent scoring twice and Gabriel Agbonlahor once to underline their claims for inclusion in the England squad being announced by Fabio Capello on Sunday for international friendlies against world champions Spain and Sweden this month.

Liverpool had a late Dirk Kuyt goal disallowed for offside and was held to a 0-0 draw by Swansea City at Anfield, a huge improvement on Swansea's last visit to Anfield for an FA Cup tie in 1990 when it lost 8-0.

Liverpool manager Kenny Dalglish said afterwards: "We did not do what we are capable of today and credit to Swansea for that.

"I am disappointed with the level of performance we produced but, as much as we have to respect the opposition, we need to see what we can do not to repeat a performance like that again."

Swansea was applauded off by the Liverpool crowd after its keeper Michael Vorm made an astonishing late save from Glen Johnson as Liverpool failed to win at home for the third successive match.

The round of games will be completed on Sunday when lowly Fulham plays fifth-placed Tottenham Hotspur, Wolverhampton Wanderers play bottom club Wigan Athletic and Bolton Wanderers face Stoke City.

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